Fast timing has emerged as a critical requirement for radiation detection in medical and high energy physics, motivating the search for scintillator materials with high light yield and fast time response. However, light emission rates from conventional scintillation mechanisms fundamentally limit the achievable time resolution, which is presently at least one order of magnitude slower than required for next-generation detectors. One solution to this challenge is to generate an intense prompt signal in response to ionizing radiation. In this paper, we present colloidal semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs) as promising prompt photon sources. We investigate two classes of NCs: two-dimensional CdSe nanoplatelets (NPLs) and spherical CdSe/CdS core/giant shell quantum dots (GS QDs). We demonstrate that the emission rates of these NCs under pulsed X-ray excitation are much faster than traditional mechanisms in bulk scintillators, i.e. 5d-4f transitions. CdSe NPLs have a sub-100 ps effective decay time of 77 ps and CdSe/CdS GS QDs exhibit a sub-ns value of 849 ps. Further, the respective CdSe NPL and CdSe/CdS GS QD X-ray excited photoluminescence have the emission characteristics of excitons (X) and multiexcitons (MX), with the MXs providing additional prospects for fast timing with substantially shorter lifetimes.

MARTINEZ TURTOS, R., Gundacker, S., Polovitsyn, S., Christodoulou, S., Salomoni, M., Auffray, E., et al. (2016). Ultrafast emission from colloidal nanocrystals under pulsed X-ray excitation. JOURNAL OF INSTRUMENTATION, 11(10) [10.1088/1748-0221/11/10/P10015].

Ultrafast emission from colloidal nanocrystals under pulsed X-ray excitation

MARTINEZ TURTOS, ROSANA
Primo
;
SALOMONI, MATTEO;
2016

Abstract

Fast timing has emerged as a critical requirement for radiation detection in medical and high energy physics, motivating the search for scintillator materials with high light yield and fast time response. However, light emission rates from conventional scintillation mechanisms fundamentally limit the achievable time resolution, which is presently at least one order of magnitude slower than required for next-generation detectors. One solution to this challenge is to generate an intense prompt signal in response to ionizing radiation. In this paper, we present colloidal semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs) as promising prompt photon sources. We investigate two classes of NCs: two-dimensional CdSe nanoplatelets (NPLs) and spherical CdSe/CdS core/giant shell quantum dots (GS QDs). We demonstrate that the emission rates of these NCs under pulsed X-ray excitation are much faster than traditional mechanisms in bulk scintillators, i.e. 5d-4f transitions. CdSe NPLs have a sub-100 ps effective decay time of 77 ps and CdSe/CdS GS QDs exhibit a sub-ns value of 849 ps. Further, the respective CdSe NPL and CdSe/CdS GS QD X-ray excited photoluminescence have the emission characteristics of excitons (X) and multiexcitons (MX), with the MXs providing additional prospects for fast timing with substantially shorter lifetimes.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
gas and liquid scintillators); Hybrid detectors; Materials for solid-state detectors; scintillation and light emission processes (solid; Scintillators; Timing detectors;
Timing detectors; Hybrid detectors; Materials for solid-state detectors; Scintillators, scintillation and light emission processes (solid, gas and liquid scintillators)
English
2016
11
10
P10015
reserved
MARTINEZ TURTOS, R., Gundacker, S., Polovitsyn, S., Christodoulou, S., Salomoni, M., Auffray, E., et al. (2016). Ultrafast emission from colloidal nanocrystals under pulsed X-ray excitation. JOURNAL OF INSTRUMENTATION, 11(10) [10.1088/1748-0221/11/10/P10015].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/140741
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